IoT Requires Operational Intelligence
The emerging Internet of Things (IoT) is an extension of digital connectivity to devices and sensors in homes, businesses, vehicles and potentially almost anywhere. This innovation means that virtually any device can generate and transmit data about its operations – data to which analytics can be applied to facilitate monitoring and a range of automatic functions.
To do these tasks IoT requires what Ventana Research calls operational intelligence (OI), a discipline that has evolved from the capture and analysis of instrumentation, networking and machine-to-machine interactions of many types. We define operational intelligence as a set of event-centered information and analytic processes operating across an organization that enable people to use that event information to take effective actions and make optimal decisions.
The evolution of operational intelligence, especially in conjunction with IoT, is encouraging companies to revisit their priorities and spending for information technology and application management. However, sorting out the range of options poses a challenge for both business and IT leaders. Some see potential value in expanding their network infrastructure to support OI. Others are implementing event processing (EP) systems that employ new technology to detect meaningful patterns, anomalies, and relationships among events. Increasingly, organizations are using dashboards, visualization, and modeling to notify nontechnical people of events and enable them to understand their significance and take appropriate and immediate action.
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By Dave Menninger
Chief Business Officer at Context Labs and Spherical Analytics | Driving Growth With Impact Across Energy Transition, Critical Infrastructure and Carbon Markets.
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